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So much for the Oyster Revolution in London
Not every Londoner as a underground near them so they use a Overground
which don't take Oyster card pay as you go so we don't save on the cost of one-day travel with a Oyster card pay as you go,we have to use Cash fares. So much for the Oyster Revolution in London |
So much for the Oyster Revolution in London
In message . com,
" writes Not every Londoner as a underground near them so they use a Overground which don't take Oyster card pay as you go so we don't save on the cost of one-day travel with a Oyster card pay as you go,we have to use Cash fares. So much for the Oyster Revolution in London You can get Oystercards at newsagents, so if the Overground used them it would not be a problem. -- martyn dawe |
So much for the Oyster Revolution in London
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So much for the Oyster Revolution in London
Mizter T wrote: People who don't live near Underground stations can nonetheless take part in the "Oyster Revolution" by using Oyster PAYG to pay for their bus fares - the saving is considerable, as on Oyster bus fares are only £1 - half the cash fare of £2 - and if you make several journeys on buses during the day the daily price capping system means you'll pay a maximum of £3, which is cheaper than the £3.50 cost of a paper one-day bus pass. But you'll probably lose more than that as your faulty Oystercard breaks down taking your money with it! |
So much for the Oyster Revolution in London
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So much for the Oyster Revolution in London
"solar penguin" typed
Let's hope so. With a bit of luck we can can stop this stupid scheme to con us into paying for faulty, unreliable cards that just swallow your money and then break down! I can't say I've had any trouble getting money/credit refunded when my registered Oysters have failed. The _real_ revolution will come when we rise up against those TfL tyrants trying to force Oyster on us, and get rid of them once and for all! I accept that there are Big Brother aspects to Oyster I sometimes dislike. I am just in the process of persuading my elderly parents (who have had Freedom Passes for 10 years) that they should have Oyster cards for early morning travel, guests and mislaid Freedom Passes. They will have to familiarise themselves with the system. It seems entirely wrong that they should pay TfL's punitive cash fares. -- Helen D. Vecht: Edgware. |
So much for the Oyster Revolution in London
Helen Deborah Vecht wrote: "solar penguin" typed Let's hope so. With a bit of luck we can can stop this stupid scheme to con us into paying for faulty, unreliable cards that just swallow your money and then break down! I can't say I've had any trouble getting money/credit refunded when my registered Oysters have failed. You must have some really good local newsagents. Neither of the ones near me could do anything to help when my card broke down! It seems entirely wrong that they should pay TfL's punitive cash fares. If TfL just reduced the cash fares to a reasonable level, no-one would need to bother with this stupid Oyster business in the first place! |
So much for the Oyster Revolution in London
solar penguin wrote: If TfL just reduced the cash fares to a reasonable level, no-one would need to bother with this stupid Oyster business in the first place! Er... yes. That's the point, isn't it? Boarding times will be quicker if tickets are mostly Oyster. Jonn |
So much for the Oyster Revolution in London
There is also the issue of physical cash - going cashless removes considerable security risks for staff handling coins/notes. Nicks |
So much for the Oyster Revolution in London
On Sat, 13 Jan 2007 12:12:31 -0000,
Nicks wrote: There is also the issue of physical cash - going cashless removes considerable security risks for staff handling coins/notes. Except that I typically top up my oyster card with cash. I'd use the auto-topup except that I use the tube so rarely that I've not yet managed to be able to predict when/where I'll next use it. I also have a worry that, because I use oyster so rarely, there's a possibility I could lose my card and have it being used fraudulently for a month before I got my visa bill and saw the problem with auto-topup although I think it sends you an email when auto-topup is triggered and I keep my oyster card with my goldcard so I'm unlikely to lose one without the other and I would notice my goldcard being lost so I'm prepared to take the risk with auto-topup But why can't you just go into a station and then straight back out without incurring a charge? On one occasion I spent as long on the tube as I would have done walking because I entered the gates before I realized there were line problems: stupid, I know, that I wouldn't just write off the 1.50 and instead struggled with multiple changes at packed stations, but it's a psychological thing - if I'm paying then I expect to get to use it. Tim. -- God said, "div D = rho, div B = 0, curl E = - @B/@t, curl H = J + @D/@t," and there was light. http://tjw.hn.org/ http://www.locofungus.btinternet.co.uk/ |
So much for the Oyster Revolution in London
Tim Woodall typed
I also have a worry that, because I use oyster so rarely, there's a possibility I could lose my card and have it being used fraudulently for a month before I got my visa bill and saw the problem with auto-topup although I think it sends you an email when auto-topup is triggered and I keep my oyster card with my goldcard so I'm unlikely to lose one without the other and I would notice my goldcard being lost so I'm prepared to take the risk with auto-topup If you register your card with Oyster online, you can keep an eye on it from your computer. I have just done this with my ancient ex bus pass. -- Helen D. Vecht: Edgware. |
So much for the Oyster Revolution in London
In message .com,
solar penguin writes Helen Deborah Vecht wrote: "solar penguin" typed Let's hope so. With a bit of luck we can can stop this stupid scheme to con us into paying for faulty, unreliable cards that just swallow your money and then break down! I can't say I've had any trouble getting money/credit refunded when my registered Oysters have failed. You must have some really good local newsagents. Neither of the ones near me could do anything to help when my card broke down! It seems entirely wrong that they should pay TfL's punitive cash fares. If TfL just reduced the cash fares to a reasonable level, no-one would need to bother with this stupid Oyster business in the first place! How about ringing the help desk when u have trouble with your card -- martyn dawe |
So much for the Oyster Revolution in London
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So much for the Oyster Revolution in London
Is there a ticket machine right by either of the bus stops? You can buy a
one-day ticket from those. How much does a one-day bus pass cost these days, anyway? "Earl Purple" wrote in message ps.com... Now we happen to live right near 2 bus stops but neither of them have travel agents right outside so if we wanted to get a one-day travelcard or one-day bus-pass it meant walking to a newsagent a distance away or even driving to one to start the journey. |
So much for the Oyster Revolution in London
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So much for the Oyster Revolution in London
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So much for the Oyster Revolution in London
Earl Purple wrote: wrote: Is there a ticket machine right by either of the bus stops? You can buy a one-day ticket from those. No there isn't, but with pre-pay now it is a problem only if we intend to use national rail at some point. Sometimes one may ride without paying because there is simply no convenient way to do so. On one occasion a couple of years ago I did just that from Pudding Mill Lane to Canary Wharf because there was no option to renew a season. As it happens I did end up "paying" for the journey later but had to go to Canary Wharf Jubilee Line station to do so. By the by Canary Wharf DLR station's information booth (on the middle platform) can sell you tickets and it 'does' Oyster, though I suspect it might be akin to a newsagent and thus can't sell you single tickets. It can also sell you tickets to West End shows. On another occasion I free-rode from Finchley Road & Frognal because there was no option to renew a season there and didn't want to head to Finchley Road tube and back to do it. I think that journey was also probably paid for when I eventually got somewhere that I could renew the season. Also once went Moorgate to Bowes Park on pre-pay then walked to Bounds Green to renew the season that would start the next day and touched "out" there by reaching over the barrier that opens. So once again the journey was actually paid for. Yes I could have changed at Finsbury Park and headed to Bounds Green on the Piccadilly Line but I didn't want to. Though in the last example you only paid FCC for *part* of your journey - the Moorgate to Finsbury Park portion. The Oyster system would have allocated the rest of the journey and hence the rest of the revenue to LU for a Piccadilly line journey from FP to Bounds Green. The Finsbury Park to Bowes Park portion of your journey on FCC was therefore not paid for. And before anyone says anything yes I'm sure the Oyster PAYG revenue sharing arrangements are far more complex than outlined above, but the point stands. Of course it's about time Oyster PAYG was valid on the FCC Great Northern lines, and indeed everywhere else, but that's a different topic that's in almost perpetual discussion here on utl! |
So much for the Oyster Revolution in London
Mizter T wrote: Though in the last example you only paid FCC for *part* of your journey - the Moorgate to Finsbury Park portion. The Oyster system would have allocated the rest of the journey and hence the rest of the revenue to LU for a Piccadilly line journey from FP to Bounds Green. The Finsbury Park to Bowes Park portion of your journey on FCC was therefore not paid for. Why should it assume I used that line at all? I might have taken the Northern Line to Kings Cross then the Piccadilly Line from there. And if I have an Oyster season, how would it allocate that? What might be useful, but I don't think it happens, would be that if you buy an Oyster Season ticket which would have covered any journeys you have already made that day, those journeys are automatically refunded. eg I get a bus to the station (paying £1) then buy a season ticket, the £1 would automatically go back onto the Oyster pre-pay. That would have solved the problem of the journey from Pudding Mill Lane to Canary Wharf, where I could have touched in and out, and subsequently had the fare automatically refunded when I bought an Oyster season later the same day. |
So much for the Oyster Revolution in London
Earl Purple wrote:
Mizter T wrote: Though in the last example you only paid FCC for *part* of your journey - the Moorgate to Finsbury Park portion. The Oyster system would have allocated the rest of the journey and hence the rest of the revenue to LU for a Piccadilly line journey from FP to Bounds Green. The Finsbury Park to Bowes Park portion of your journey on FCC was therefore not paid for. Why should it assume I used that line at all? I might have taken the Northern Line to Kings Cross then the Piccadilly Line from there. True - the two most obvious routes for making such a journey are basically either: (1) by Underground all the way via Kings Cross, then on the Picc, or Vic to FP and then Picc to Bounds Green (2) or via the FCC Great Northern line then change at FP to the Picc (or FCC GN to Highbury & Islington, Vic to FP, Picc to Bounds Green for those who like cross-platform interchanges). The exact way revenue is allocated will be very complex, but I'm sure that assumptions regarding most-likely routes taken will be a factor. Thus the Oyster system would make an assumption you've taken one of the two routes above. How the money is actually split is a dark art, and I'm sure multiple other factors come into play here (e.g. perhaps whether the journey was made at the weekend or not is a factor, as during the w/e there's no FCC GN service into Moorgate). Don't get me wrong, I'm not having a go whatsoever, all I was doing was just pointing out that it is incorrect to say that you had paid for the whole journey you actually made. And if I have an Oyster season, how would it allocate that? More black magic. Seriously, there are very sophisticated and complex formulas for the apportionment of money from the sale of Travelcards. Whether usage statistics of Travelcards loaded on Oyster is part of this calculation I don't know - I guess it could be, but remember that National Rail journeys in London don't involve passing through gates so such statistics would only be part of the overall picture. Holders of printed season Travelcard holders are sent surveys to complete, whether this happens with holders of season Travelcards on Oyster I don't know. The results of these surveys are presumably factored in. What might be useful, but I don't think it happens, would be that if you buy an Oyster Season ticket which would have covered any journeys you have already made that day, those journeys are automatically refunded. eg I get a bus to the station (paying £1) then buy a season ticket, the £1 would automatically go back onto the Oyster pre-pay. That would have solved the problem of the journey from Pudding Mill Lane to Canary Wharf, where I could have touched in and out, and subsequently had the fare automatically refunded when I bought an Oyster season later the same day. I absolutely agree that such a facility would be really neat, I and many others would find it very useful. Perhaps, however, it is more complicated to implement than at first seems - more complicated scenarios exist where a passenger has been travelling all day all over the LU and bus network, perhaps hitting a daily capping level but also having made peak-time LU journey(s) that didn't contribute to the off-peak cap. Calculating what should be discounted from the season Travelcard price might thus prove difficult, especially if the passenger was purchasing a season Travelcard that didn't cover all the zones in which they had travelled during the day - if this was the case then to discount the appropriate amount could involve the need for revised daily caps to be imposed retrospectively. If there was some rule about the discount for just one journey then this would then be unfair on someone who had started and finished at stations where they couldn't renew their season Travelcard. If there are any such considerations then perhaps it is just easier to not attempt to implement such a facility - i.e. keep it simple! In addition remember that you can buy season Travelcards to collect when passing through a specified LU or DLR station - you need to order the day before and IIRC the ticket will be available for virtual collection for seven days. Plus you can also buy season Travelcards on Oyster in advance from both Tube ticket offices and newsagents, something like up to 30 days before the start date (at least from Tube ticket offices - not sure of what's on offer from newsagents). |
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